6.2.1 Water consumption tracking
Measure the total volume of water used in the university that is taken from mains supply, desalinated, or extracted from rivers, lakes, or aquifers?
FTUI measures water usage every month. The average volume of water used in 2022 is 268,579 m3.
6.2.2 Water consumption per person
Volume of water used in the Faculty: Incoming (treated/extracted water) amounted to 268,579 m3 with a campus population of 2.346.
6.3.1 Wastewater treatment
A process in place to treat wastewater.
FTUI has a WasteWater Treatment Plant (IPAL) installed in the Metallurgical & Materials Engineering Department, and installed in the Canteen to recycle dishwashing waste. Apart from that, the test results report on the water released from the IPAL at the DTM Building, the results meet the requirements of Minister of Environment & Forestry Regulation (PemenLHK) No. 68 of 2016.
Evidence Link :
Implementation of the Recycled Water Utilization Program at FTUI
6.3.2 Preventing water system pollution
Processes to prevent polluted water entering the water system, including pollution caused by accidents and incidents at the university.
To prevent pollution of the water system, FTUI has a Wastewater Treatment Plant (IPAL) installed in the Metallurgical & Materials Engineering Department, and installed in the Canteen. The water from the WWTP is channeled to infiltration wells and to water the grass.
Evidence Link :
Implementation of the Recycled Water Utilization Program at FTUI
6.3.3 Free drinking water provided
Provide free drinking water for students, staff and visitors (e.g. drinking water fountains).
FTUI has a Drinking Water Fountain to provide free drinking water for students, staff and visitors. The Drinking Water Fountain is available in Building S (RKB 1), Building EC and Building K (RKB 2). FTUI has also provided dispensers in every building so that students/employees can refill drinking water using drinking bottles or glasses.
Evidence Link :
FTUI Program to Reduce Paper and Plastic Use 2022
6.3.4 Water-conscious building standards
Apply building standards to minimize water use
FTUI has building standards to minimize water use in accordance with the I-Cell book pages 30-38. The I-Cell Book is a guide that contains information about the I-Cell building and still applies today. The I-Cell Building is an Integrated Creative Engineering Learning Laboratory that provides smart building technology that strives for efficiency and environmental preservation. This book explains various types of standardization, measurements and programs related to environmental preservation.
Evidence Link :
6.3.5 Water-conscious planting
Plant landscapes to minimize water usage. (e.g. use drought-tolerant plants)
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6.4.1 Water reuse policy
Have a policy to maximize water reuse across the university?
FTUI already has a policy on clean water conservation on campus, namely the Decree of the FTUI Dean Number: 1605/D/SK/FTUI/2013 concerning Clean Water Conservation Policy in the FTUI Environment which was set on 18 November 2013 and still applies today.
Evidence Link :
Clean Water Conservation Policy at FTUI 2022
6.4.2 Water reuse measurement
Measure the reuse of water across the university?
FTUI memiliki pengukuran penggunaan kembali air sesuai dengan buku I-Cell halaman 36. The I-Cell Book is a guide that contains information about the I-Cell building and still applies today. The I-Cell Building is an Integrated Creative Engineering Learning Laboratory that provides smart building technology that strives for efficiency and environmental preservation. This book explains various types of standardization, measurements and programs related to environmental preservation.
Evidence Link :
6.5.1 Water management educational opportunities
Provide educational opportunities for local communities to learn about good water management
FTUI actively promotes awareness of water use on campus and in the wider community through the 2022 FTUI Sustainability Report (pages 48-49). The report explains the programs and facilities that FTUI has to support sustainability programs in accordance with the SDGs.
Evidence Link :
6.5.2 Promoting conscious water usage
Actively promote conscious water usage on campus, and in the wider community
FTUI actively promotes awareness of water use on campus and in the wider community through the 2022 FTUI Sustainability Report (pages 48-49). The report explains the programs and facilities that FTUI has to support sustainability programs in accordance with the SDGs.
Evidence Link :
6.5.3 Off-campus water conservation support
Support water conservation off campus
Dr. Rr. Dwinanti Rika Marthanty, ST, MT. from the Faculty of Engineering (FTUI) and Dr. Reni Suwarso from the Faculty of Social and Political Sciences (FISIP UI) received grant funding of 1.8 billion rupiah (AUD 180,000) from the state government of Victoria, Australia as part of the Citarum Program to address heavy pollution in the Citarum River, West Java. The program also aims to create a River Transformation Framework (RTF) through combining urban design principles with insights from the urban sustainability transition and circular economy. The Citarum program will also develop a living laboratory pilot site on the Citarum River. The Citarum project started on 15 October 2021 and is expected to be completed on 14 October 2022. The project, which is jointly led by Monash University and the University of Indonesia, also involves several international research institutions, including Padjadjaran University (UNPAD), CSIRO, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology (EAWAG) in Switzerland, as well as the West Java Environment and R&D Agency.
Evidence Link :
6.5.4 Sustainable water extraction on campus
Where water is extracted (for example from aquifers, lakes or rivers) utilize sustainable water extraction technologies on associated university grounds on and off campus.
FT UI has a water conservation program and has implemented it according to the link
https://eng.ui.ac.id/en/blog/15155/
6.5.5 Cooperation on water security
Cooperate with local, regional, national, or global governments on water security.
FTUI collaborates with local, regional, national governments and international institutions in the field of water security. This is implemented in the Collaboration between UI Researchers and the Australian Government to Handle Citarum River Waste. This program also involves Padjadjaran University (UNPAD), CSIRO, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology (EAWAG) in Switzerland, and the West Java Environmental and Research and Development Agency. The researchers hope this research will produce context-specific evidence that can be developed as a solution to be implemented across rivers in Indonesia and the Asia-Pacific.
Evidence Link :